Installation¶
watchdog
requires 3.6+ to work. See a list of Dependencies.
Installing from PyPI using pip¶
$ python -m pip install -Uwatchdog
# or to install the watchmedo utility: $ python -m pip install -Uwatchdog
[watchmedo]
Installing from source tarballs¶
$ wget -c https://pypi.python.org/packages/source/w/watchdog/watchdog-2.2.1.tar.gz $ tar zxvfwatchdog
-2.2.1.tar.gz $ cdwatchdog
-2.2.1 $ python -m pip install -e . # or to install the watchmedo utility: $ python -m pip install -e ".[watchmedo]"
Installing from the code repository¶
$ git clone --recursive git://github.com/gorakhargosh/watchdog.git
$ cd watchdog
$ python -m pip install -e .
# or to install the watchmedo utility:
$ python -m pip install -e ".[watchmedo]"
Dependencies¶
watchdog
depends on many libraries to do its job. The following is
a list of dependencies you need based on the operating system you are
using.
Operating system Dependency (row) |
Windows |
Linux 2.6 |
macOS Darwin |
BSD |
---|---|---|---|---|
Yes |
The following is a list of dependencies you need based on the operating system you are
using the watchmedo
utility.
Operating system Dependency (row) |
Windows |
Linux 2.6 |
macOS Darwin |
BSD |
---|---|---|---|---|
Yes |
Yes |
Yes |
Yes |
Installing Dependencies¶
The watchmedo
script depends on PyYAML which links with LibYAML.
On macOS, you can use homebrew to install LibYAML:
brew install libyaml
On Linux, use your favorite package manager to install LibYAML. Here’s how you do it on Ubuntu:
sudo apt install libyaml-dev
On Windows, please install PyYAML using the binaries they provide.
Supported Platforms (and Caveats)¶
watchdog
uses native APIs as much as possible falling back
to polling the disk periodically to compare directory snapshots
only when it cannot use an API natively-provided by the underlying
operating system. The following operating systems are currently
supported:
Warning
Differences between behaviors of these native API are noted below.
- Linux 2.6+
Linux kernel version 2.6 and later come with an API called inotify that programs can use to monitor file system events.
Note
On most systems the maximum number of watches that can be created per user is limited to
8192
.watchdog
needs one per directory to monitor. To change this limit, edit/etc/sysctl.conf
and add:fs.inotify.max_user_watches=16384
- macOS
The Darwin kernel/OS X API maintains two ways to monitor directories for file system events:
watchdog
can use whichever one is available, preferring FSEvents overkqueue(2)
.kqueue(2)
uses open file descriptors for monitoring and the current implementation uses macOS File System Monitoring Performance Guidelines to open these file descriptors only to monitor events, thus allowing OS X to unmount volumes that are being watched without locking them.Note
More information about how
watchdog
useskqueue(2)
is noted in BSD Unix variants. Much of this information applies to macOS as well.- BSD Unix variants
BSD variants come with kqueue which programs can use to monitor changes to open file descriptors. Because of the way
kqueue(2)
works,watchdog
needs to open these files and directories in read-only non-blocking mode and keep books about them.watchdog
will automatically open file descriptors for all new files/directories created and close those for which are deleted.Note
The maximum number of open file descriptor per process limit on your operating system can hinder
watchdog
’s ability to monitor files.You should ensure this limit is set to at least 1024 (or a value suitable to your usage). The following command appended to your
~/.profile
configuration file does this for you:ulimit -n 1024
- Windows Vista and later
The Windows API provides the ReadDirectoryChangesW.
watchdog
currently contains implementation for a synchronous approach requiring additional API functionality only available in Windows Vista and later.Note
Since renaming is not the same operation as movement on Windows,
watchdog
tries hard to convert renames to movement events. Also, because the ReadDirectoryChangesW API function returns rename/movement events for directories even before the underlying I/O is complete,watchdog
may not be able to completely scan the moved directory in order to successfully queue movement events for files and directories within it.Note
Since the Windows API does not provide information about whether an object is a file or a directory, delete events for directories may be reported as a file deleted event.
- OS Independent Polling
watchdog
also includes a fallback-implementation that polls watched directories for changes by periodically comparing snapshots of the directory tree.